The Mexican Wolf Interagency Field Team has completed its annual count of Mexican wolves living in the wild in the Southwest, ...
Mexican gray wolves continue to be one of the most controversial conservation issues in Arizona and across the region.
Arizona and New Mexico wildlife agencies recently reported that the population of endangered Mexican gray wolves grew by 33 wolves last year.
Such killings are not new but are typically carried out by wildlife officials.
Republican bills that would allow the endangered Mexican gray wolf to be killed and no longer be considered an endangered species won approval Tuesday in the Arizona House of Representatives. Cattle ...
The Arizona and New Mexico wildlife agencies today jointly announced that the number of endangered Mexican gray wolves in the Southwest grew by 33 last year — to 319 in 2025 from 286 in 2024.
The population of Mexican gray wolves living in Arizona and New Mexico rose from a count of 286 documented individuals at the ...
Champions of the Mexican gray wolf are watching a bill introduced in Congress by Rep. Paul Gosar, R-AZ, to remove the wolf ...
State and federal wildlife agencies reported 319 Mexican gray wolves in the wild, up from 286 a year ago.
The most recent count of Mexican gray wolves found more than 300 in the wild, marking 10 consecutive years of growth. Over the past decade, the number of the endangered wolves observed in the wild ...
New Mexico’s Department of Game and Fish relocated an endangered Mexican gray wolf on Friday after it strayed from is boundary a second time, drawing criticism from advocacy groups. Male wolf 3065, ...
The smallest gray wolf subspecies in North America, Mexican gray wolves are also one of the rarest and most imperiled mammals on the continent. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (and its predecessor ...